Targeted Lymphoid Homing of Dendritic Cells Is Required for Prolongation of Allograft Survival

  • Garrod K
  • Chang C
  • Liu F
  • et al.
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Abstract

Accumulating evidence that dendritic cells (DC) are important regulators of peripheral immune tolerance has led to the concept that donor-derived DC may be useful for inducing donor-specific transplantation tolerance. Although in vitro studies in this field have been encouraging, in vivo results have been inconsistent. Recent evidence has suggested a critical role of lymphoid organs in tolerance induction. In this study, we use a novel gene transduction technique to show that engineered expression of CCR7 on immature DC can markedly increase DC homing to lymphoid organs, leading to increased interaction with Ag-specific T cells. Moreover, we show that a single infusion of DC coexpressing CCR7 and the immunomodulatory molecule viral IL-10 (vIL-10) markedly prolongs cardiac allograft survival (mean survival time >100 days); importantly, DC expressing either vIL-10 alone or CCR7 alone was not effective. These results demonstrate an important paradigm for immune modulation using DC.

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Garrod, K. R., Chang, C. K., Liu, F.-C., Brennan, T. V., Foster, R. D., & Kang, S.-M. (2006). Targeted Lymphoid Homing of Dendritic Cells Is Required for Prolongation of Allograft Survival. The Journal of Immunology, 177(2), 863–868. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.177.2.863

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